A script to completely take over a running Linux system remotely, allowing you
to log into an in-memory rescue environment, unmount the original root
filesystem, and do anything you want, all without rebooting. Replace one distro
with another without touching a physical console.

WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING

This is experimental. Do not use this script if you don’t understand exactly
how it works. Do not use this script on any system you care about. Do not use
this script on any system you expect to be up. Do not run this script unless
you can afford to get physical access to fix a botched takeover. If anything
goes wrong, your system will most likely panic.

That said, this script will not (itself) make any permanent changes to your
existing root filesystem (assuming you run it from a tmpfs), so as long as you
can remotely reboot your box using an out-of-band mechanism, you should be OK.
But don’t blame

Original URL: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/feedsapi/BwPx/~3/Fz9LeV_M7Jk/takeover.sh

Recent Posts: <CONTENT /> v.6

Lets have a look on what we have on this article: Setting up Apache 2 in Linux Subsystem for Windows 10 Setting up MySQL Server in Linux Subsystem for Windows 10 Setting up PHP in Linux Subsystem for Windows 10 Visual Studio Code and PHP Extensions Few tweaks to work on PHP, Visual Studio Code …

There are some good pointers and excellent tips in Web Development and Advanced Techniques with Linux on Windows (WSL) that are useful if you’re using WSL as part of your dev toolkit. Getting the same envs, including PATH, running across both systems is handy. It’s cool to be able to develop in Windows and test …

Virtually nowhere to be found were the 90 percent of lawyers who practice outside biglaw, the business clients who do not run mega-corporations, the access-to-justice community, or those disenfranchised from the legal system. — Five Days, Two Conferences, One Echo Chamber | LawSites https://www.lawsitesblog.com/2019/02/five-days-two-conferences-one-echo-chamber.html